Follow Apollo Mission “Tweets,” 40 Years Later

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This is just cool.

Nature, the publishing group, is mixing the old with the new by “tweeting” the Apollo 11 moon mission as it happened — 40 years later. Followers on Twitter will be able to read about technical milestones, political challenges, and related events in the space race starting today, just over a month before the 40th anniversary of the first lunar landing.

Apollo 11’s Twitter profile is here — and since the announcement this morning, already boasts 110 followers. The tweets will chronicle the Apollo 11 crew’s journey to the moon and back, and taper off during the weeks following the mission to give followers the context surrounding the moon mission and its implications for science and the wider world.

Source: Nature News. More information is available in an accompanying blog.

NASA just launched two ships for the moon as Obama looks into cost of space exploration and asks the question: Will the US ever walk on the moon again? What do you people think?

Would you like a journalist to investigate that story and produce a report FOR YOU? CBS’s Correspondent Peter King reports from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. He has produced for ‘Global for me’ an exclusive podcast… Listen to it, register your comments by e-mailing us ([email protected]) and please feel free to repost…

[Global for me – ‘Journalism FOR YOU’ – wants to empower its users to instigate professional journalistic coverage of stories, issues and current affairs that are not already available through conventional news sources or which, in your view, require more detailed attention]